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.\"     @(#)syscall.2	8.1 (Berkeley) 6/16/93
.\"
.\"
.\" 2002-03-20  Christoph Hellwig <hch@infradead.org>
.\"	- adopted for Linux
.\" 2015-01-17, Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org>
.\"	Added mips and arm64.
.\"
.TH SYSCALL 2 2016-10-08 "Linux" "Linux Programmer's Manual"
.SH NAME
syscall \- indirect system call
.SH SYNOPSIS
.nf
.BR "#define _GNU_SOURCE" "         /* See feature_test_macros(7) */"
.B #include <unistd.h>
.BR "#include <sys/syscall.h>   "  "/* For SYS_xxx definitions */"

.BI "long syscall(long " number ", ...);"
.fi
.SH DESCRIPTION
.BR syscall ()
is a small library function that invokes
the system call whose assembly language
interface has the specified
.I number
with the specified arguments.
Employing
.BR syscall ()
is useful, for example,
when invoking a system call that has no wrapper function in the C library.

.BR syscall ()
saves CPU registers before making the system call,
restores the registers upon return from the system call,
and stores any error code returned by the system call in
.BR errno (3)
if an error occurs.

Symbolic constants for system call numbers can be found in the header file
.IR <sys/syscall.h> .
.SH RETURN VALUE
The return value is defined by the system call being invoked.
In general, a 0 return value indicates success.
A \-1 return value indicates an error,
and an error code is stored in
.IR errno .
.SH NOTES
.BR syscall ()
first appeared in
4BSD.
.SS Architecture-specific requirements
Each architecture ABI has its own requirements on how
system call arguments are passed to the kernel.
For system calls that have a glibc wrapper (e.g., most system calls),
glibc handles the details of copying arguments to the right registers
in a manner suitable for the architecture.
However, when using
.BR syscall ()
to make a system call,
the caller might need to handle architecture-dependent details;
this requirement is most commonly encountered on certain 32-bit architectures.

For example, on the ARM architecture Embedded ABI (EABI), a
64-bit value (e.g.,
.IR "long long" )
must be aligned to an even register pair.
Thus, using
.BR syscall ()
instead of the wrapper provided by glibc,
the
.BR readahead ()
system call would be invoked as follows on the ARM architecture with the EABI:

.in +4n
.nf
syscall(SYS_readahead, fd, 0,
        (unsigned int) (offset >> 32),
        (unsigned int) (offset & 0xFFFFFFFF),
        count);
.fi
.in
.PP
Since the offset argument is 64 bits, and the first argument
.RI ( fd )
is passed in
.IR r0 ,
the caller must manually split and align the 64-bit value
so that it is passed in the
.IR r2 / r3
register pair.
That means inserting a dummy value into
.I r1
(the second argument of 0).

Similar issues can occur on MIPS with the O32 ABI,
on PowerPC with the 32-bit ABI, and on Xtensa.
.\" Mike Frysinger: this issue ends up forcing MIPS
.\" O32 to take 7 arguments to syscall()

The affected system calls are
.BR fadvise64_64 (2),
.BR ftruncate64 (2),
.BR posix_fadvise (2),
.BR pread64 (2),
.BR pwrite64 (2),
.BR readahead (2),
.BR sync_file_range (2),
and
.BR truncate64 (2).
.SS Architecture calling conventions
Every architecture has its own way of invoking and passing arguments to the
kernel.
The details for various architectures are listed in the two tables below.

The first table lists the instruction used to transition to kernel mode
(which might not be the fastest or best way to transition to the kernel,
so you might have to refer to
.BR vdso (7)),
the register used to indicate the system call number,
the register used to return the system call result,
and the register used to signal an error.
.if t \{\
.ft CW
\}
.nf
.TS
l2	l2	l2	l2	l2	l.
arch/ABI	instruction	syscall #	retval	error	Notes
_
alpha	callsys	v0	a0	a3	[1]
arc	trap0	r8	r0	-
arm/OABI	swi NR	-	a1	-	[2]
arm/EABI	swi 0x0	r7	r0	-
arm64	svc #0	x8	x0	-
blackfin	excpt 0x0	P0	R0	-
i386	int $0x80	eax	eax	-
ia64	break 0x100000	r15	r8	r10	[1]
m68k	trap #0	d0	d0	-
microblaze	brki r14,8	r12	r3	-
mips	syscall	v0	v0	a3	[1]
nios2	trap	r2	r2	r7
parisc	ble 0x100(%sr2, %r0)	r20	r28	-
powerpc	sc	r0	r3	r0	[1]
s390	svc 0	r1	r2	-	[3]
s390x	svc 0	r1	r2	-	[3]
superh	trap #0x17	r3	r0	-	[4]
sparc/32	t 0x10	g1	o0	psr/csr	[1]
sparc/64	t 0x6d	g1	o0	psr/csr	[1]
tile	swint1	R10	R00	R01	[1]
x86_64	syscall	rax	rax	-	[5]
x32	syscall	rax	rax	-	[5]
xtensa	syscall	a2	a2	-
.TE
.fi
.PP
Notes:
.RS 4
.IP [1] 4
On a few architectures,
a register is used as a boolean
(0 indicating no error, and \-1 indicating an error) to signal that the
system call failed.
The actual error value is still contained in the return register.
On sparc, the carry bit
.RI ( csr )
in the processor status register
.RI ( psr )
is used instead of a full register.
.IP [2]
.I NR
is the system call number.
.IP [3]
For s390 and s390x,
.I NR
(the system call number) may be passed directly with
.I "svc\ NR"
if it is less than 256.
.IP [4]
On SuperH, the trap number controls the maximum number of arguments passed.
A
.IR "trap\ #0x10"
can be used with only 0-argument system calls, a
.IR "trap\ #0x11"
can be used with 0- or 1-argument system calls,
and so on up to
.IR "trap #0x17"
for 7-argument system calls.
.IP [5]
The x32 ABI uses the same instruction as the x86_64 ABI and is used on
the same processors.
To differentiate between them, the bit mask
.I __X32_SYSCALL_BIT
is bitwise-ORed into the system call number for system calls
under the x32 ABI.
Both system call tables are available though,
so setting the bit is not a hard requirement.
.RE
.if t \{\
.in
.ft P
\}
.PP
The second table shows the registers used to pass the system call arguments.
.if t \{\
.ft CW
\}
.nf
.TS
l	l2	l2	l2	l2	l2	l2	l2	l.
arch/ABI	arg1	arg2	arg3	arg4	arg5	arg6	arg7	Notes
_
alpha	a0	a1	a2	a3	a4	a5	-
arc	r0	r1	r2	r3	r4	r5	-
arm/OABI	a1	a2	a3	a4	v1	v2	v3
arm/EABI	r0	r1	r2	r3	r4	r5	r6
arm64	x0	x1	x2	x3	x4	x5	-
blackfin	R0	R1	R2	R3	R4	R5	-
i386	ebx	ecx	edx	esi	edi	ebp	-
ia64	out0	out1	out2	out3	out4	out5	-
m68k	d1	d2	d3	d4	d5	a0	-
microblaze	r5	r6	r7	r8	r9	r10	-
mips/o32	a0	a1	a2	a3	-	-	-	[1]
mips/n32,64	a0	a1	a2	a3	a4	a5	-
nios2	r4	r5	r6	r7	r8	r9	-
parisc	r26	r25	r24	r23	r22	r21	-
powerpc	r3	r4	r5	r6	r7	r8	r9
s390	r2	r3	r4	r5	r6	r7	-
s390x	r2	r3	r4	r5	r6	r7	-
superh	r4	r5	r6	r7	r0	r1	r2
sparc/32	o0	o1	o2	o3	o4	o5	-
sparc/64	o0	o1	o2	o3	o4	o5	-
tile	R00	R01	R02	R03	R04	R05	-
x86_64	rdi	rsi	rdx	r10	r8	r9	-
x32	rdi	rsi	rdx	r10	r8	r9	-
xtensa	a6	a3	a4	a5	a8	a9	-
.TE
.fi
.PP
Notes:
.RS 4
.IP [1] 4
The mips/o32 system call convention passes
arguments 5 through 8 on the user stack.
.RE
.if t \{\
.in
.ft P
\}
.PP
Note that these tables don't cover the entire calling convention\(emsome
architectures may indiscriminately clobber other registers not listed here.
.SH EXAMPLE
.nf
#define _GNU_SOURCE
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/syscall.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <signal.h>

int
main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
    pid_t tid;

    tid = syscall(SYS_gettid);
    syscall(SYS_tgkill, getpid(), tid, SIGHUP);
}
.fi
.SH SEE ALSO
.BR _syscall (2),
.BR intro (2),
.BR syscalls (2),
.BR errno (3),
.BR vdso (7)
